THE UNDERGROUND RIDIO PROTESTING IN TAIWAN: A FRAME ANALYSIS OF CALL-IN CONVERSATIONS

碩士 === 東海大學 === 社會學系 === 84 === During the mid-80''s and the after, protests pursuing freedom orjustice in Taiwan were booming, but in a still unfair condition ofmedia acess. Groups struggling over their specific rights were, inthe same time, st...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Li, Shih-Ming, 李世明
Other Authors: Chu Yuan-Horng
Format: Others
Language:zh-TW
Published: 1996
Online Access:http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/38384211516590868417
Description
Summary:碩士 === 東海大學 === 社會學系 === 84 === During the mid-80''s and the after, protests pursuing freedom orjustice in Taiwan were booming, but in a still unfair condition ofmedia acess. Groups struggling over their specific rights were, inthe same time, struggling over the rights of access to the media.And they sometimes fashioned alterative cultures of representationand communication according to circumstances. Underground radios incompany with the form of call-in(out) talk could be recognized assuch strategy of protests in the early 90''s. Extending Bourdieu''spoints about symbolic struggle, and the dicussion on mobilizationframes of social movement by Snow etl., this thesis tries toilluminate the implication of the underground radios as a historicalform of protests in Taiwan, yet explored more about the charateristicsof its programing frames and linguistic culture. Paralleling thefrequent and important campaigns these years, the form of radioprotests activiated‘populist’and‘popular’linguistic interaction,and agitated the groups-making effect significantly. Censorship (inBourdieu''s sense) conditioned the survival of radio protest morethan repression. Above all, the protest situation together withthe forms creating in it gave oppotunities to cultural formationformerly oppressed.